On May 27, 1861, Benjamin Butler, commander of the Union army in Virginia and North Carolina, decreed that slaves who fled to Union lines were legitimate "contraband of war," and were not subject to return to their Confederate owners. The declaration precipitated scores of escapes to Union lines around Fortress Monroe, Butler's headquarters in Virginia. In this crudely drawn caricature, a slave stands before the Union fort taunting his plantation master. The planter (right) waves his whip and cries, "Come back you black rascal." The slave replies, "Can't come back nohow massa Dis chile's contraban." Hordes of other slaves are seen leaving the fields and heading toward the fort.Title appears as it is written on the item.Weitenkampf, p. 126...
A satire on Southern recruitment efforts during the early part of the Civil War. In a scene before a...
One of three similar prints published by Oliver Evans Woods, reflecting grave northern fears of Brit...
Confederate president Jefferson Davis's capture by Union cavalry on May 10, 1865, while allegedly fl...
An illustrated sheet music cover for an anti-Confederate comic song. Confederate president Jefferso...
A satire on the antagonism between Northern abolitionists on the one hand, and Secretary of State Da...
Another show of Northern optimism in the early months of the Lincoln administration. Uncle Sam appro...
This cartoon portrays a southerner giving instructions to his slave as he flees from Sherman’s army....
A sheet music cover with a comic scene of escaping slaves, produced around the time of Union general...
The Confederate leaders are portrayed as a band of competing opportunists led by South Carolina gove...
Carte de visite of General Benjamin Franklin Butler, who served in the Union Army during the Civil W...
The etching depicts high-standing citizens of New Orleans shackled and completing hard labor. These ...
The print is a reproduction of a nineteenth century etching. The satirical piece depicts Abraham Lin...
Artifact label: “Slaves, Tools, Provisions &c” Confederate Impressment Receipts, Alabama and South C...
In early November 1863, Union Army officials gathered at Goodrich’s Landing, in northern Louisiana, ...
An impassioned condemnation of the Fugitive Slave Act passed by Congress in September 1850, which in...
A satire on Southern recruitment efforts during the early part of the Civil War. In a scene before a...
One of three similar prints published by Oliver Evans Woods, reflecting grave northern fears of Brit...
Confederate president Jefferson Davis's capture by Union cavalry on May 10, 1865, while allegedly fl...
An illustrated sheet music cover for an anti-Confederate comic song. Confederate president Jefferso...
A satire on the antagonism between Northern abolitionists on the one hand, and Secretary of State Da...
Another show of Northern optimism in the early months of the Lincoln administration. Uncle Sam appro...
This cartoon portrays a southerner giving instructions to his slave as he flees from Sherman’s army....
A sheet music cover with a comic scene of escaping slaves, produced around the time of Union general...
The Confederate leaders are portrayed as a band of competing opportunists led by South Carolina gove...
Carte de visite of General Benjamin Franklin Butler, who served in the Union Army during the Civil W...
The etching depicts high-standing citizens of New Orleans shackled and completing hard labor. These ...
The print is a reproduction of a nineteenth century etching. The satirical piece depicts Abraham Lin...
Artifact label: “Slaves, Tools, Provisions &c” Confederate Impressment Receipts, Alabama and South C...
In early November 1863, Union Army officials gathered at Goodrich’s Landing, in northern Louisiana, ...
An impassioned condemnation of the Fugitive Slave Act passed by Congress in September 1850, which in...
A satire on Southern recruitment efforts during the early part of the Civil War. In a scene before a...
One of three similar prints published by Oliver Evans Woods, reflecting grave northern fears of Brit...
Confederate president Jefferson Davis's capture by Union cavalry on May 10, 1865, while allegedly fl...